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Genetically modified animals are animals that have been genetically modified for a variety of purposes including producing drugs, enhancing yields, increasing resistance to disease, etc. The vast majority of genetically modified animals are at the research stage while the number close to entering the market remains small.
Genetically modified mice are the most common animal model for transgenic research. [22] Transgenic mice are currently being used to study a variety of diseases including cancer, obesity, heart disease, arthritis, anxiety, and Parkinson's disease. [23] The two most common types of genetically modified mice are knockout mice and oncomice ...
A genetically modified organism (GMO) is any organism whose genetic material has been altered using genetic engineering techniques.The exact definition of a genetically modified organism and what constitutes genetic engineering varies, with the most common being an organism altered in a way that "does not occur naturally by mating and/or natural recombination". [1]
Transgenic hybrids are viable and grow more rapidly than transgenic salmon and other wild-type crosses in conditions emulating a hatchery. In stream mesocosms designed to simulate natural conditions, transgenic hybrids express competitive dominance and suppress the growth of transgenic and non-transgenic salmon by 82% and 54%, respectively. [65]
The first transgenic livestock were produced in 1985, [66] by micro-injecting foreign DNA into rabbit, sheep and pig eggs. [67] The first animal to synthesise transgenic proteins in their milk were mice, [68] engineered to produce human tissue plasminogen activator. [69] This technology was applied to sheep, pigs, cows and other livestock. [68]
Polly and Molly (born 1997), two ewes, were the first mammals to have been successfully cloned from an adult somatic cell and to be transgenic animals at the same time. [1] This is not to be confused with Dolly the Sheep, the first animal to be successfully cloned from an adult somatic cell where there wasn’t modification carried out on the adult donor nucleus.
Megan and Morag, two domestic sheep, were the first mammals to have been successfully cloned from differentiated cells. [1] They are not to be confused with Dolly the sheep which was the first animal to be successfully cloned from an adult somatic cell [2] or Polly the sheep which was the first cloned and transgenic animal. [3]
Tracy (1990 – 1997) was a transgenically modified sheep created by scientists at Scotland's Roslin Institute to produce the human protein alpha 1-antitrypsin, a substance regarded in the 1990s as a potential pharmaceutical for the treatments of cystic fibrosis and emphysema. [1]